In admitting that it is unable to locate a kapa bundle burial identified
as 2005 removed from the island of Kaho`olawe by John Stokes and later opened
with the contents including ancestral remains and burial related objects
effectively separated, the Bishop Museum wrote Hui Malama I Na Kupuna O
Hawai`i Nei stating,

The ancestral Molokai remains were repatriated and reinterred in April
1991. However, the identified iwi po`o has still not been accounted for,
as it was given to the Cranmore Ethnographic Museum by the Bishop Museum
in 1910.

Mokapu and Heleloa, O`ahu

Following completion of the NAGPRA inventory of ancestral Native Hawaiian
remains and funerary objects from Mokapu and Heleloa, O`ahu, the U.S. Navy's
contract consultant, the Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum acknowledged that
22 accessions of ancestral remains are missing. Most of the remains were
collected by the Bishop Museum prior to the construction of the Kane`ohe
Marine Corp Base: (see Mokapu and Heleloa)

Following completion of it's statutorily mandated inventory of human
remains and associated funerary objects, the University of Pennsylvania
Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology notified Hui Malama that it could
not account for five sets of remains. Later, the Museum found three and
included them with the ancestral remains to be repatriated. However, two
ancestral Native Hawaiian remains are still unaccounted for,

Following the inadvertent discovery of a single set of ancestral Native
Hawaiian remains on this federal enclave, the Navy recovered the remains
of a young child. However, prior to repatriation and reinterment, the Navy
lost the remains after placing them in an evidence room on base: